Sharing a countdown across timezones
How to run a global countdown so everyone sees the same moment in their own local clock.
Timezones are the most common reason countdowns go wrong. Someone announces '8 PM Friday' and half the audience shows up a day late.
Anchor to one timezone, share to all
When you create a timer on timer.ad, you pick the timezone once. The link stores an absolute moment in time, so every viewer — in Tokyo, Berlin, or São Paulo — sees the countdown to that exact instant.
Show the local clock alongside the countdown
Viewers don't need to do timezone math: their browser already knows where they are. The countdown updates live in their local clock automatically.
Coordinate a global drop
Whether it's a song release, a livestream, or a multinational meeting kickoff, sending one timer link removes the back-and-forth of 'what time is that for me?' messages entirely.